The International Space Station, the $100 billion
outpost that has steadfastly orbited the Earth for more than a decade,
may get a chance to explore new horizons when it retires in 2020. NASA
is considering using part of it to build a spaceship that would be sent
to an asteroid, while also mulling more exotic artificial-gravity
designs reminiscent of Arthur C Clarke.
President Barack Obama jettisoned his
predecessor's plan to return astronauts to the moon by 2020 and in April
proposed to send them to an asteroid by 2025 instead.
NASA is now trying to work out the details of how to carry out such a mission and is hosting a conference on the topic in Washington, DC, on Tuesday and Wednesday.
On Tuesday, Brian Wilcox of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, presented (pdf) some of the ideas generated by the agency's engineers during brainstorming sessions in January and June.
Mother ship Tranquility
One idea is to take apart the
International Space Station, which is currently set to be retired in
2020, and use one of its crew compartments to build an asteroid-bound
spacecraft in orbit instead of launching a similar capsule from Earth.
"These [asteroid] missions are going
to occur at about the time that the space station is near retirement, so
one has to wonder, 'Is it possible to use assets from the station as
part of your mission complement?'" he said.
A space station compartment called Node 3 or Tranquility, which launched to the station aboard a shuttle mission in February,
is particularly attractive for recycling because it has docking ports
that could be used to attach to a pair of smaller, more nimble
spacecraft. After arriving at the asteroid, astronauts could enter the
smaller spacecraft and detach from the main ship in order to inspect the
asteroid up close (see an illustration of the docked craft).
Spinning space odyssey
A separate idea is to use a rotating design in order to generate artificial gravity, a concept made famous in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey,
by Arthur C Clarke and Stanley Kubrick. Two spacecraft would be tied to
opposite ends of a tether a few hundred metres long and set rotating
around each other at speeds of tens of metres per second (see illustration).
The rotation would make astronauts in
the spacecraft feel a constant acceleration similar to Earth's gravity,
preventing some of the bone and muscle loss that would otherwise occur
over the months-long missions. "You can introduce quite a substantial
equivalent gravity field ... [eliminating] the deleterious effects of
microgravity," Wilcox said.
Wilcox described the proposals as
concepts rather than part of a final design for an asteroid mission.
Further discussion of how to carry out such a mission is scheduled to
take place at the conference on Wednesday.
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